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Angel Eyes
10-25-2016, 01:20 AM
Your Internet Service Provider May Soon Block Kodi Piracy Add-ons

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Piracy has been a big issue for cable operators with third-party Kodi add-ons being the fastest growing source of piracy in the US right now. Now Cisco claims to have developed a system that will automatically block live pirate streams as they occur. The new system will allow Cisco and Internet service providers to block piracy streams from reaching your house.
Pirate streams of sports and other cable channels often pull straight from the subscriber’s account who is streaming the content online. That is the weak spot Cisco plans to take advantage of.
Here is the overly simple version of how this will work: Cisco’s system works by monitoring all streaming going through their systems and looking for a watermark. If they detect a digital watermark in the image not coming from an official source they will block the transmission of the stream over their networks.
This moves the fight over sites and services that stream live TV and sport events from trying to shut down the servers to just blocking the streams.
“Traditional takedown mechanisms such as sending legal notices (commonly referred to as ‘DMCA notices’) are ineffective where pirate services have put in place infrastructure capable of delivering video at tens and even hundreds of gigabits per second, as in essence there is nobody to send a notice to,” the Cisco explains.
“Robust and unique watermarks are embedded into each distributor feed for identification. The code is invisible to the viewer but can be recovered by our specialist detector software,” FMTS explains.
“Once infringing content has been located, the service automatically extracts the watermark for accurate distributor identification.”
“The process is fully automated, ensuring a timely response to incidents of piracy. Gone are the days of sending a legal notice and waiting to see if anyone will answer,” Cisco said in a blog post.

As with all things questions remain: how reliable will this new system work and will pirate sites find a workaround? The issue for pirate sites is if they do find the watermark in the image and remove it will it block an important part of the picture? Also cable operators can easily move the watermark and could do it every hour if they wanted to.

kenkell1
10-25-2016, 02:45 AM
personally I think Cisco is full of S**t

rudee
10-26-2016, 03:23 PM
From what I have read, this IS going to happen..
Angel Eyes described it very well..

Newf
11-29-2016, 03:24 PM
anyone have any more news on this? Just my luck, just bought my first android box lol

Longster
11-29-2016, 07:08 PM
This will happen sooner or later, just use VPN to bypass.

whoknows
11-29-2016, 09:23 PM
This reminds me of the news channels when they come on and tell yu you must have install winter tires in the parts of the country that get snow. Then because people keep snow tires for years by putting them on and off depending on the season, tire manufacturers needed something more to sell in the slow times. The all season wasn't good enough as it was lasting to long, so they brought out the all weather tire.
Cisco is doing the same thing. Things are slow for cisco so hit the airways with something new. Whether it works or not is not the case, but gives them something to sell.